Rise in Havana Bus Fares in the Wind
September 21, 2013
By Rogelio Manuel Díaz Moreno
HAVANA TIMES – I have the impression that it won't be long before
there's a new rise in the price of public transportation in Havana.
The formal price of a ticket on the urban buses is 40 cents (of a peso),
in the so-called national currency. Given the equivalent in US money –
about 2 cents – this price may seem infinitesimally small, until you
also look at the dollar value of what a Cuban worker receives as a
salary: about 20 dollars monthly.
But if those 40 centavos is the official price, paying it takes a great
deal of work. You have to deposit the correct change into the cashbox on
the bus. The driver, in addition to his stressful work, has to pressure
the passengers to pay – and his remuneration depends on what he collects.
But small coins in this country can only be found in the banks and you
have to stand in long and tedious lines to get them. And the banks are
open, generally, the same hours as all other places of work.
Previously there were fare collectors working on the buses, who always
had enough small coins to give change, but this was later proscribed by
the authorities, with the contention that they were robbing the State of
a large portion of the money collected.
The majority of the citizens, therefore, resign themselves to handing
over a peso coin or bill; others give the driver a look somewhere
between pitiful and challenging, and walk on without paying. I myself,
alternate between both actions so as to achieve a kind of balance. In
addition, I hitchhike whenever I can.
Apart from this, the deterioration in the transport service continues to
accelerate, with no remedy in sight. The Ministry of Transport has
implemented a series of palliative measures, instead of solutions, and
all have a common denominator: a higher price.
To begin, there are the buses especially for "the workers" – as if the
others were for the lazy. These other buses are supposed to transport
the workers from certain workplaces. However, outside of this schedule
they also cover irregular public routes, all at the price of a peso.
The majority of the public fight to get on these buses, they happily pay
the price, given the escape that it implies from a mobbed bus stop with
no other prospect in sight. In the end, they also end up paying that
same peso in the bus that's supposed to cost only 40 cents.
In addition to this, routes have also been established for another type
of bus that charges 5 pesos. One part of these buses work under a
cooperative model and are also very sought after, to the point that it's
hard to manage getting on them because there are established limits in
the quantity of passengers they carry.
Going back to the problem of the 40 centavo general transit price – that
of the peso and the change: each time that this problem is mentioned by
the official channels, they cast the entire blame on the lazy and
unethical population for not paying their 40 centavos in a disciplined
manner.
No one remembers the principle: "the customer is always right" and the
fact that if a service costs a certain amount, I have no reason to pay
more than that. The responsibility for giving change for the perfectly
legal coin I pay with should lie with the person offering the service,
isn't that the way it works?
The authorities have refused to apply other tried-and-true systems that
function all over the world, such as prepaid tickets, magnetic cards,
etc, under the pretext of the difficult initial investment.
As if this wouldn't cost less than a thousandth of what is invested in
acquiring new vehicles, and it could immediately resolve the problem of
fare collection.
It's true that the 40 cent ticket is strongly subsidized, from the point
of view of cost versus price. But from the point of view of the worker
who earns such a miserable salary, it is well in line with his income.
And it's worth remembering that the advantages of maintaining a
subsidized price for public transport have been recognized in a slew of
capitalist countries. Beyond just an aid to the lowest income sectors,
it facilitates productive activity, contributes to environmental
protection and saves the main arteries from a huge volume of traffic.
But I fear that the clumsy neo-liberal discourse of our modern
reformists is also going to ignore these elements.
The problem and the solution, I fear, will be channeled down the easiest
road: make one peso the standard price of a trip, period. Maybe there'll
be some reorganization in the bus terminals so that the drivers' salary
be tied even closer to the passengers' payment of the fares. In this
way, the authorities get the problem off their backs by setting one part
of the population against the other.
It doesn't matter that this signifies an increase of 250% for those
workers who generally depend on public transport to get to and from
work. The resulting drop in buyng power that is now practically a given,
will be made official.
And don't count on the unions, the women's federation or the
neighborhood committees to mount a protest. They never protest against
any government policy or decision.
It does come to mind, as a hopeful memory, that in contemporary Cuba
there was one incident where the population managed to reverse a
maneuver to raise the price of a form of public transportation.
In Santiago, the combative opposition of the citizens managed to roll
back a planned service fee increase for a trip in the privately owned
horse drawn wagons used as public transport in that city. Could this
experience be replicated when dealing with a State-administered transit
service?
Source: "Rise in Havana Bus Fares in the Wind" -
http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=98948
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